Canadian Syllabics Tth Symbol ᕯ

Canadian syllabic writing, or simply syllabics, is a family of writing systems used in a number of Indigenous Canadian languages, including Algonquian, Inuit, and (formerly) Athabaskan. Previously, these languages lacked a formal writing system. They are valued for their distinctness from Latin script and the ease with which literacy can be achieved; indeed, by the late nineteenth century, the Cree had achieved what may have been one of the world's highest rates of literacy.

Syllabics are abugidas with consonant-vowel pairs represented by glyphs. They are based on the work of James Evans.

All Cree languages from Naskapi (spoken in Quebec) to the Rocky Mountains, including Eastern Cree, Woods Cree, Swampy Cree, and Plains Cree, are currently written in Canadian syllabics. They are also used to write Inuktitut in the eastern Canadian Arctic; in Nunavut, they are co-official with the Latin script. They are used regionally for Ojibwe, Canada's other major Algonquian language, as well as Blackfoot, where they are obsolete. Syllabics have been used to write Dakelh (Carrier), Chipewyan, Slavey, Tch (Dogrib), and Dane-zaa among other Athabaskan languages further west (Beaver). Syllabics have been used in the United States by border communities on occasion, but are primarily a Canadian language.

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Canadian Syllabics Tth Symbol Information

Symbol Name Canadian Syllabics Tth
Unicode Version 3.0 (September 1999)
Unicode U+156F
CSS Code \156F
Hex Code ᕯ
HTML Code ᕯ
Alt Code 5487

Canadian Syllabics Tth Symbol Encoding

UTF-8 0xE1 0x95 0xAF
UTF-16 0x156F
UTF-32 0x0000156F


How to add canadian syllabics tth symbol via keyboard on different Operating systems

You can type the canadian syllabics tth on most modern devices with the help of following methods:

How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Microsoft Word

You can type the canadian syllabics tth on microsoft Microsoft Word using steps mentioned below:

  • Place your cursor in the text area where you need to insert the symbol and type 1 5 6 F
  • Without moving the cursor press keys Alt + x together
  • The original 1 5 6 F is now transformed into ᕯ

How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Microsoft Windows

You can type the canadian syllabics tth on Microsoft windows using following steps:

  • Hold Alt and press 5 4 8 7 to type canadian syllabics tth on your windows machine.

How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Mac OS

You can type the canadian syllabics tth on Mac OS using following steps:

  • Place your cursor in the text area where you need to insert the symbol
  • Press Ctrl + ⌘ Command + ⎵ Space to bring up the Character Viewer. Alternatively, choose Edit ⇒ Emoji & Symbols
  • Type “Canadian Syllabics Tth” in the search field at the top and press Enter
  • The symbol should appear. Click on it to insert it into your text
  • How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Mac OS
    How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Mac OS

How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on Linux

You can type the canadian syllabics tth on Linux using following steps:

  • Place your cursor in the text area where you need to insert the symbol
  • Hold ⇧ Shift + Ctrl and press the letter + U
  • Press keys 1 5 6 F consecutively
  • And then press ↵ Enter , the desired symbol will be added to your document

How to type canadian syllabics tth symbol on IOS and Android

The easiest way to type the canadian syllabics tth on ios and android is to copy and paste it wherever you need it.


How to use canadian syllabics tth in CSS

Copy // css example
span {
content: "\156F";
}

How to type canadian syllabics tth in HTML

Copy // html example
<span>&#5487;</span>

Canadian Syllabics Tth symbol representation in programming languages

canadian syllabics tth's representation in different programming languages can be found in table below:

Language Representation
Rust \u{156F}
Ruby \u{156F}
Python \u156F
PHP \u{156F}
Perl "\x{156F}"
Java \u156F
Modern JavaScript - Since ES6 \u{156F}
JavaScript \u156F
Go \u156F
C# \u156F
C and C++ \u156F
Bash and Zsh - inside echo -e \u156F
RFC 5137 \u'156F'
No Result
Try something else